Thursday, April 6, 2017

Dance and Social Studies

This activity integrates Social Studies into Art, more specifically integrating a global issue into dance.
Read the book If Kids Ran the World as a minds on, afterwards, students would brainstorm various global issues that we hear about in the news. Some issues that we talked about were deforestation, poverty, Trump as president, war, and global warming. Then, we got into groups and chose one of the issues to interpret into a dance.

The strategies that we had to use were:

Cat and mouse technique: Partner A will begin by performing a movement series while Partner B remains frozen. When A is finished, she/he will freeze; this is B's silent cue to begin her/his series. The communication continues back and forth until the 'conversation' is complete/ Remind students that they are not playing charades, but rather, communicating through movement.

ABA: The ABA form is derived from a musical form and has two sections, A and B, followed by an ending A section. In the first part, a series of movement phrases, or theme A, is stated and manipulated. Part B then presents a contrasting theme, and in the final section there is a return to theme A with a twist.

For the cat and mouse technique, we were in pairs, instead of alone. One pair started the theme A and then froze, then the second pair would complete theme B then freeze. Finally the first pair finished with theme A.  We also used scarves to create a visual effect.


As you can see, in the video we chose to interpret deforestation. We chose green and blue scarves for theme A to represent the forest and the sky/water, which has a more graceful tone. Theme B is much harsher because it represents cutting down trees and death, which is also why we chose to use black scarves.

This lesson was designed for grade 6 and addressed the Overall Expectation: People and environments: Canada's interactions with the global community, but it can be adapted to be used for a different grade and/or topic. This was a good activity to address a difficult subject, because global issues can be a sensitive topic. Addressing it through dance can really get students to express their feelings and opinions on the matters in a safe place.

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

French and Drama

I have had 2 teaching blocks in Core French, so I know that french and drama go hand in hand. It was good to see other instructional strategies to integrate french with drama from my peers. These are some of the activities that I would want to use in my french classroom.

Learning vocabulary is always a difficult task. Giving dictées are very passé, so it was good to see a new method to help students learn and recall new words in french. For this strategy, you would give students a list of vocab words and have them choose 3 words in their groups. Students create a situation or story that incorporate the chosen words to help them remember the words and their meanings. In the scene, students only say the three vocab words during the scene. After the scene, the audience will guess what words they chose. The goal is to have students see the new vocabulary words in an authentic setting, rather than just have them memorize strange words. This brings the words to life and gives them meaning.

Another strategy that was taught in class was pantomime, or mimed activity, which is when students act out a word/phrase without speaking and exaggerate their expressions. I thought this was a great strategy to incorporate into a french class, because not only does it help students remember new vocabulary, but it is a typical french activity. Students will recognize the stereotypical mime with the painted white face and beret, so you could introduce them to this image as a fun way to get them to use pantomine, or miming.

In my final teaching block, I was at Tapleytown elementary school, in a Core French classroom. I taught a unit on french festivals to grades 4-8, each focusing on a different festival in a Canadian province, the United-States, or in France. Almost every day I would incorporate drama in my instructional strategies or in the activities that I had my students complete. When I teach, I try to instruct mainly in french, to immerse students in the language. To help them understand, I act out words and over exaggerate my gestures to get my meaning across.  For their final task, I had students create a travelogue (video postcard) of them visiting the festival that they were studying. Below is the example I created with a student volunteer, Mademoiselle Turner:

These are the Drama and French curriculum expectations that I incorporated into this task:
Drama:
B1. Creating and Presenting: apply the creative process (see pages 19–22) to process drama and the development of drama works, using the elements and conventions of drama to communicate feelings, ideas, and stories.
B3. Exploring Forms and Cultural Contexts: demonstrate an understanding of a variety of drama and theatre forms, traditions, and styles from the past and present, and their sociocultural and historical contexts.
French:
A3.1 Intercultural Awareness: using information from oral French texts, identify French-speaking communities in Ontario, find out about aspects of their cultures, and make connections to personal experiences and their own and other communities

After learning about their respective festival, students wrote a script about the festival their were visiting and talk about the food, activities, weather, and culture at the festival, and compared it to their own lives. They used a green screen to act out their scene.

Monday, April 3, 2017

Dance and Science

I collaborated with my peers to create this dance lesson that integrated Dance and Science. The curriculum connections include:
Grade 5 Science and Technology: Understanding Structures and Mechanism
Overall Expectation:
1. analyse social and environmental impacts of forces acting on structures and mechanisms;
Specific Expectations:
1.1 analyse the effects of forces from natural phenomena (e.g., tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis) on the natural and built environment
1.2 evaluate the impact of society and the environment on structures and mechanisms, taking different perspectives into account (e.g., the perspectives of golfers, local bird-watching groups, families, a school board), and suggest ways in which structures and mechanisms can be modified to best achieve social and environmental objectives
Grade 5 Dance
Overall Expectation:
A1. Creating and Presenting: apply the creative process to the composition of movement sequences and short dance pieces, using the elements of dance to communicate feelings and ideas
Specific Expectations:
A1.1 translate into movement sequences a variety of images and ideas from other classroom subjects, including the arts
A1.3 use movement in the choreographic form call and response in a variety of ways when creating dance pieces

Minds On 10 min.
Use the Action Pak dance cards and select cards based on themes (i.e. fire, water, wind... ) focus on words related to storms/natural disasters such as “wind, rain, sway”
  • Have students stand up and interpret some of the selected words with no inferencing. (3 Minutes total)
  • Stop and ask students to think about these words in relation to weather
    • How does the word “fall” or “sway” change when you are using it to describe/represent a tsunami/tornado/flood?
  • Have students choose a partner and face each other. Each pair will choose a leader, who will interpret “wind” using mirroring.
    • Mirroring is when: partners face each other and decide who will be the first leader. The leader will begin to perform slow movements with different body parts while his/her partner follows along. The goal is to have both partners moving at (almost) the same time. Have students switch leaders, and interpret thunder and lightning using mirroring.
Action (20 mins)
  • Show students a video in which a building or city infrastructure is changes because of the weather conditions. (5 mins)
  • As a class, brainstorm different storms and types of weather conditions or instances that can be or were so severe that they change the way something looks: (3-5 mins)
    • Tsunami
    • Hurricane
    • Tornado
    • Wind
    • Rain
    • Thunder
    • Lightning
    • Snow
  • Have students join in small groups (3-4) that will be chosen by birthday month.  
  • Have groups choose one weather condition or weather instance, and show, using dance, how the weather condition has changed the way the infrastructure looked before. Keep the weather condition a secret. (5 mins)
    • Students have access to the word cards
    • Groups will dances will include Canon as a dance strategy:
      • Cannon is when: a dance phrase is performed by more than one soloist/group and begins at different times so that the phrases overlap.
    • Each dance will begin in a still pose, and will end in a different still pose.
    • Music optional:
  • Present their dances to the class, who will guess the weather condition and dance strategy used.  (5-7 mins)
Consolidation: (10-15 mins)  
  • As a class, discuss storms and their effect on cities and people:
    • How do these storms and bad weather conditions affect cities?
    • How do the people deal with it? In serious conditions, people will lose all of their possessions. How do they protect themselves against the weather?
    • How can cities prevent damage? Is it possible?
    • How can people prevent damage?
    • How can we help?
  • Each group will be assigned a question/topic to show in a dance
    • I.e group one will show how storms affect cities, group two will show how people recover from storms)
    • Groups will present their work using call and response:
      • Call and response is when: an individual or group performs followed by another individual or group whose performance responds to the first.
I.e call (storm) - response (how does it affect people and buildings) - response (how do people recover from natural disasters/how do people guard themselves against natural disasters).


The strategies that we incorporated in this lesson include:

Mirroring - partners face each other and decide who will be the first leader. The leader will begin to perform slow movements with different body parts while his/her partner follows along. The goal is to have both partners moving at (almost) the same time.
Modification:
  • Use a rope or silks to hold onto to make the mirroring easier.
Extension:
  • Integrate more people making it a group effort.

Call and Response - an individual or group performs followed by another individual or group whose performance responds to the first
Interaction of different elements/opposites ( wind vs. rain) (thunder vs. lightning)  (rain v. sunlight) (Storm vs. Calm)
Modification:
  • This activity can be adapted for science and you can use the call and response to show the interactions of elements in science such as magnets, ions, protons, and different forms of matter.
Extension:
  • Once the students have an idea how the different forces work together have them focus on different forces and how all the different forces would interact with each other.
  • Have each individual take on one specific force and create a series of movements that represent that force and have them face off with different forces(students) in the class.

Canon - a dance phrase is performed by more than one soloist/group and begins at different times so that the phrases overlap
Extreme weather event (hurricane, tsunami, tornadoes, thunder and lightening storm)
Modification:
  • You could adapt this lesson to be done while being seated in a circle arms length apart so the actions are limited to the upper body and allows the students to really focus on their bodies and relationships. (great for younger students, or those with various gate issues).
Extension:

  • Divide the class into smaller groups of 4 or 5 and have each person create a sequence within that group. Choose one person to begin their sequence and have the rest of the group follow the sequence. Once the first persons sequence has come to an end have the next person in the group perform their sequence and repeat that until everyone has had a chance to lead the group through their.
  • Challenge each student in the class to come up with a 5-10 second sequence and attempt to run the canon sequence through the entire class allowing every student to perform their sequence.